Hello and Happy Chinese New Year to all my Chinese readers. I want to
wish you all a very prosperous and joyful year of the horse! I have been
enjoying my Chinese New Year and since it lasts for 15 days, I am looking
forward to more merriment in the days ahead.
One of the most important meals for us Chinese is the reunion dinner on
Chinese New Year Eve. That is the time when the whole extended family gets
together and has a sumptuous meal. As it was not possible for me to visit my
family in Malaysia, my husband and I had the reunion dinner ourselves. Just the
two of us. Hey – that sounds like dinner every other night I hear you say. Yes,
you are correct. However, I do make a special effort and we always have loads
of fun cooking the meal together.
On the menu this year we had stir fried mixed vegetables, steamed fish
and Nonya Chicken Curry. The recipe for Nonya Chicken Curry is what I am going
to be sharing with you today. I have previously shared a recipe for Malaysian
Chicken Curry, however, the taste of this Nonya Chicken Curry is different.
It is definitely milder in the spice department and sweeter. The flavour of the
curry is also heavily infused with the aromas and taste from all the different
spices. You can definitely pick out the slight earthy sweetness from the Chinese
cinnamon stick and the aniseed like flavour from the fennel seeds.
I departed slightly from tradition and instead of serving the meal with
rice, served it with cooked and blended cauliflower for a meal with fewer
carbohydrates. The cauliflower worked as a great vehicle to soak up all the
gravy from the curry.
Before
we get to the recipe, I thought it may be insightful if I elaborate a little on
what the term “Nonya” means and also it’s cooking style. Nonya cuisine
developed in families known as “Straits Chinese” who were Chinese settlers who
came and settled in Malaysia and Singapore and subsequently married the local
Malays. They are also commonly referred to as “Peranakan” or “Baba Chinese”.
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Fluffy cauliflower instead of rice |
The
Straits Chinese were not to be confused with later Chinese immigrants who came
to Malaysia and Singapore as labourers during the British colonial rule. The
Straits Chinese were already established and wealthy by then and they also held
British citizenship. The domestic life of the Straits Chinese was distinctly influenced
by the local Malay culture and this influence extended to their cooking. The cooking
style fused Chinese and Malay cooking styles, combining Chinese ingredients and
flavourings with Malay ones. This became known as Nonya cuisine. Common
ingredients in Nonya cooking are spices, ginger flower, screwpine leaves,
toasted prawn paste (“belachan”), chillies and coconut cream.
I
think I should also highlight that there is a difference between the Nonya
cuisine from the North and South of Malaysia. The southern Nonya cooking style
would be influenced by the Southern Malays and even Javanese cooking whereas
the Northern Nonya cuisine carries heavy influence from Thai cooking and this
is reflected in the fusion of spicy and sour flavours and using ingredients
such as tamarind.
As you can see, Nonya cuisine is indeed very fascinating and the
recipes, simply delicious. I hope to share more Nonya recipes with you.
Admittedly some of the ingredients may be difficult to procure in Western
countries however, I hope to be able to tweak and refine it to use ingredients
that you can easily obtain without compromising on the authentic flavours.
Recipe for Nonya Chicken Curry
Prep Time: 20 minutes / Cooking Time 45 minutes / Serves 4
Ingredients
750gm Chicken (remove skin and cut into pieces)
400gm Potatoes (peeled and cut into wedges)
400ml (1 tin) Coconut Milk
2 Cloves
1 Chinese Cinnamon Stick
2-3 Tbsp Chilli
Paste (5 dried chillies boiled and blended)
200gm Shallots (peeled)
3 cloves Garlic (peeled)
½ tsp Turmeric Powder
1 ½ tsp Coriander Seeds
½ tsp Cumin Seeds
½ tsp Fennel Seeds
4-5 Tbsp Cooking Oil
100ml Water
1 Tbsp Salt
1 tsp Sugar
Coriander for garnishing
Coriander for garnishing
Method
1.
In a dry pan, gently toast the coriander, cumin and fennel seeds over
medium-low heat. Be careful not to burn the spices. This is to bring out the
aroma of the spices before cooking. Once toasted, use a mortar and pestle or
spice grinder to ground up the spices. Set aside.
2. Place the shallots and garlic in a blender and blend together until
fine. Remove from blender and set aside.
3. Next, start cooking the curry. Heat oil in a wok or deep pot over a
medium-low flame. Add in the cloves and Chinese cinnamon stick and sauté to get
the aromas out. Add in the blended shallots and garlic, chilli paste, turmeric
powder and grounded coriander, cumin and fennel seeds. Stir fry the paste well
for about 10 minutes or until the oil starts to separate.
4. Add chicken and potatoes and continue to stir fry with the paste for
a further 5 minutes. Add in 100ml of water and leave to simmer on medium-low
heat. After 5 minutes, slowly pour in the coconut milk and stir through evenly.
Season with salt and sugar and simmer for a further 20-25 minutes or until the
chicken is tender and the potatoes are cooked. The gravy of the curry should be
thickened by now. Remove from heat and serve.
I think my family would really enjoy this dish. Thanks for sharing. : )
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Crystal, I sure hope they do! :)
Deleteyummy! Thanks for sharing at The Weekend Retreat!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment, I love the Weekend Retreat!
DeleteI am familiar with the spices you used and can imagine how delicious this chicken must have tasted. Also it was interesting to read about Straits Chinese and Nonya cuisine. I'll be looking forward for more Nonya recipes...
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing this at Tasty Tuesday. I am featuring it this week. Hope you'll join us back this week with some more lovely recipes.
Hi Tanusree, thank you for featuring my recipe. I am very glad you approve!
Delete